Reputation: 61
Can I save data to to either CSV or XML files on offline on client-side via HTML5?
Upvotes: 6
Views: 1192
Reputation: 4471
Let say you have created array or object like this.
var arrayOrObject = [{obj1:{name:John, age:16}},{obj2:{name:Jane, age:17}}];
you can save this data to local devices by using localStorage.
if (typeof(localStorage) == 'undefined' ) {
alert('Your browser does not support HTML5 localStorage. Try upgrading.');
}
else {
try {
localStorage.setItem("storedArrayOrObject", JSON.stringify(arrayOrObject));
//saves to the database, “key”, “value”
} catch (e) {
if (e == QUOTA_EXCEEDED_ERR) {
alert('Quota exceeded!'); //data wasn’t successfully saved due to quota exceed so throw an error
}
}
}
To get the data in Array or Object Structure:
var getStoredArrayOrObject = JSON.parse(localStorage.getItem('storedArrayOrObject'));`
To remove the localStorage Data:
localStorage.removeItem('storedArrayOrObject');
Don't recommend this but available:
localStorage.clear();
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 8166
You can use localstorage, but that only allows you to store something on browsers' internal storage (you cannot decide where and how to write data).
There's also a File API, but is at its very early stages and, by now, it doesn't allow to store files arbitrarily on the client:
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 97
You could save and export as csv like this... http://joshualay.net/examples/StamPad/StamPad.html
Upvotes: -1
Reputation: 34158
The web storage API stores data as [key,value] pair where both key,value are Strings.
So data in any format needs to adhere to this mechanism for local storage. So for example, if you have a JSON object like :
{
name:'John',
gender:'male'
}
You can store it (through JavaScript) after passing it as a string like :
localStorage.setItem("myObj","{name:'John',gender:'male'}");
For JSON objects, use JSON.stringify() to convert them to strings and use JSON.parse() to read them back.
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 35179
The offline storage is an internal storage. It is not meant to export some files to a specific format / specific folder on disk.
Upvotes: 4